Privateers Pirates

Privateers Pirates

Privateers vs. Pirates 5 “ destroy the shipping and burn the town. root out that nest of pirates and privateersmen.” British Admiralty Orders to Admiral Alexander Cochrane The confusion about privateers and pirates results from the ways they have been portrayed in mass media since the 1890s. Awareness of privateering has been largely overshadowed by the romantic Illustration from Treasure Island depiction of pirates in adventure novels, illustrations and films. Names like Blackbeard, Stede Bonnett, Henry Morgan and Captain Kidd, or tales of buried treasure chests and “pieces of eight” are well known. Even fictional figures like Long John Silver and Captain Jack Sparrow cause us to think of anyone who sails the seas capturing ships for a profit as a “pirate.” Blackbeard c. 1725 Some pirates, indeed, began their careers as legal privateers and later turned to piracy because the political arena shifted or the profits were just too tempting. Sir Francis Drake is a famous example. With support from Queen Elizabeth I, his success as a privateer helped finance England’s defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588. In later Sir Francis Drake raids on Spanish possessions, he acted out of a personal hatred of the Spanish and was considered a pirate. Henry Morgan and William Kidd also “crossed the line”, after beginning as privateers, and they are best known today as pirates. William Kidd Henry Morgan How the enemy portrays the activity also plays a part in perceptions. In 1778, the British press railed against John Paul Jones’ raids on the Irish coast, depicting him as a blood thirsty ‘The Pirate’ John Paul Jones pirate. From 1801 to 1805 - when our Navy fought the corsairs of Tripoli, Tunis and Algeria - we referred to them as “Barbary pirates” although they were legally sanctioned by their governments. The basic differences between privateers and pirates are: Decatur and the Tripolitan pirates. Privateers vs. Pirates 1. Operate only in wartime against 1. Act outside the bounds of a defined enemy. international law and custom. 2. Act under license and authority 2. Respect no flag and attack any of the government. ship, regardless of nationality. 3. Must post a bond which they 3. Owe allegiance to no nation. forfeit if they stray outside the 4. Operate independently and law. entirely for profit. 4. All captured ships and cargo 5. Do not respect personal property, must be judged as legal prizes by and often terrorize and kill any an Admiralty Court. witnesses to their actions. 5. Must provide fair treatment of 6. Know that the universal penalty prisoners and respect all personal for piracy is hanging. property. Next: Joshua Barney and Rossie .

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